Tamina Vahidy
Based in Seattle, Washington
Umber Travel
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Our Story
The best trips feel effortless—well-paced and balanced, with room for spontaneity. I design multi-destination journeys that blend luxury, adventure, and cultural depth, managing the complexity end-to-end. Shaped by experience across 35+ countries on six continents, each trip is designed to be seamless and unforgettable.
Travel Style
My approach to travel has expanded to include immersive experiences that resonate in the moment and stay with you long after. I bring that perspective to shaping trips that feel true to how you like to travel.
Travel ideas (1)

Patagonia: The End of the World, Done Right
Patagonia spans two countries, separated by the Andes into landscapes that differ as sharply in climate as they do in character. Its scale and fragmentation force you to think in systems rather than stops, where sequencing matters as much as the destination. What makes it compelling is the landscape and the effort required to access it. It rewards deliberate planning with flexibility for the unexpected.

Patagonia: The End of the World, Done Right
Patagonia spans two countries, separated by the Andes into landscapes that differ as sharply in climate as they do in character. Its scale and fragmentation force you to think in systems rather than stops, where sequencing matters as much as the destination. What makes it compelling is the landscape and the effort required to access it. It rewards deliberate planning with flexibility for the unexpected.

Patagonia: The End of the World, Done Right
Patagonia spans two countries, separated by the Andes into landscapes that differ as sharply in climate as they do in character. Its scale and fragmentation force you to think in systems rather than stops, where sequencing matters as much as the destination. What makes it compelling is the landscape and the effort required to access it. It rewards deliberate planning with flexibility for the unexpected.

Patagonia: The End of the World, Done Right
Patagonia spans two countries, separated by the Andes into landscapes that differ as sharply in climate as they do in character. Its scale and fragmentation force you to think in systems rather than stops, where sequencing matters as much as the destination. What makes it compelling is the landscape and the effort required to access it. It rewards deliberate planning with flexibility for the unexpected.
Travel photos










